I announced earlier that in honor of March Madness, I decided to create a dessert bracket with 16 styles of desserts. I’ve invited 16 great chefs to each take a category and make a recipe to enter into battle. I ranked the 16 based on my view of which was the favorite and like any bracket, the favorites are matched against the lower seeds. I won’t give you my seeding because I do not want to artificially impact your choices.
I will post a pairing each week on Wednesday and Thursday and open the polls for voting. The polls will be open from Thursday until the following Wednesday (before the next pair posts). The winner of each matchup with the most votes will move on to the next round and the chef will produce another recipe for their new matchup. The overall winner will receive any prizes I can acquire. To date the winner will receive:
- Dodo Book for Cooks
- A beautiful Bamboo Cutting Board with a Butterfly Motif, graciously donated by competitor Lindy (The Kozy Nook)
This week’s pairing is:
Cake (Chocolate Varieties) vs. Jell-O (and other gelatin)
Today we have Sophie from mommytrainingwheels was assigned the Cake (Chocolate Varieties) category. Here is what she made….
Hi, my name is Sophie and I have a few confessions to make.
Confession #1 : I am not a baker. Nope. Not at all. I am a mother, a daughter, a sister, a wife (well, sort of). I am a teacher and I love to be in the kitchen. But I am not a baker. I do, however, love to bake. I love the precision that it takes. I love how too much or too little of an ingredient can change what you’re trying to do.
Confession #2: I like to rebel in the kitchen. I love to experiment, to substitute ingredients. I love to not follow some instructions too precisely just to see what happens.
Confession #3: I am a procrastinator. Seriously. I baked my chocolate cake at the very last minute as I worked through the pain of a lovely ear infection because primo, it helped me pass the time more quickly and secundo, I had no choice.
Confession #4: I don’t even like chocolate cake. I find that most times, it is too sweet for my tastes. I do, however, like Oreos.
And so, without further ado, I bring you *drumroll please*
The Oreo Cake
The cake mix starts off with a pretty standard list of ingredients.
Cake mix recipe taken from the book “La chimie des desserts” (The Chemistry of Desserts)
Ingredients
500 mL (2 cups): All purpose flour
180 mL (3/4 cup) : Fry’s type cocoa
5 mL (1 teaspoon): Baking soda
1 mL (1/4 teaspoon): Salt
180 mL (3/4 cup) : Unsalted butter, softened (I used melted butter)
375 mL: (1 ½ cups): Sugar
3: Eggs, tempered (I used mine straight out of the fridge)
10 mL (2 teaspoons): Vanilla extract
375 mL (1 ½ cups): Milk
Directions
- Place the grill in the center of the oven. Preheat oven to 350F (180 C). Grease one 9 inch springform pan or two 8 inch cake pans.
- In a bowl, sieve together the flour, cocoa, baking soda and salt.
- In another bowl, using an electric hand whisk, beat the butter a few seconds, until it takes on a creamy texture. Gradually add the sugar and keep whisking until the mix becomes light in color, about 3 to 4 minutes. (Alternatively, if you used melted butter, just add all the sugar to the butter and beat until the mix becomes light in color).
- Add the eggs, one at a time while continuing to whisk until the mix turns almost whitish and is very homogenous, about 2 minutes. Add the vanilla.
- On the lowest speed, incorporate the dry ingredients and the milk until well mixed in.
- Transfer the mix to springform pan for about 1 hour 15 minutes (for me, it took 1 hour 50 minutes before the cake was cooked. (Alternatively, bake for 30-35 min if two 8 inch cake moulds were used).
- Let the cake cool for about 10 minutes, remove from mould and let the cake cool completely on a pastry grill.
Oreo Frosting
Ingredients
12: Oreo cookies
250 mL (1 cup): Whipping cream (35%)
To taste: Maple syrup
Directions
- Put the 12 Oreo cookies in a food processor and reduce them to a fine powder.
- In a bowl, pour the cream and, with an electric hand whisk, whisk the cream until it forms soft peaks. Add the Oreo crumbs and continue to whisk until you obtain firm peaks. Taste and add extra sweetener if desired (I found that it was sweet enough with just the Oreos)
- Cut the cake in two lengthwise. Spread a little over a third of the frosting on top of the bottom half of the cake. Put the top half on and spread the rest of the frosting on the top.
- Admire your work of art and hide the cake so that no one other than you can eat it!
Licks piggy lips. I’m ready. Do you need a taster 🙂 If so, I’m your piggy. XOXO – Bacon
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Hum, no taster this time, the men in my household took care of that already (rather quickly actually for some reason).
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Darn. Shucks. I’m good for crumbs too 🙂 Remember me next time. XOXO – Bacon
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Will do 😉
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I really wanted to participate, but alas, school… So excited to see the results of the dessert wars.
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That looks delicious!
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Thanks! I assure you that it tastes even better than it looks 😉
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i knew this had to be a Canadian……Fry’s cocoa and Five Roses Flour……. yum
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Hehe, I was actually commenting to my hubby that I liked seeing the actual ingredients to a recipe because they gave me an idea of where the person making the recipe was from. Cheers!
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Looks scrumptious! 🙂 Good luck!
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This looks really good!!
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Yum!! This looks awesome.
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ooooooooooooooooooo…. looks SOOO YUMMY!!!!
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I’m amazed that’s just whipping cream and Oreo’s for frosting. Great job!
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Thanks! I wasn’t sure how it’d turn out, but I’m really pleased with the end result.
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